rding to Berkley Historical Museum Vice Chairman Jeffrey Tong, Roseland Park Cemetery was officially dedicated in June 1910 with the mayors of Detroit and Pontiac in attendance, and poet Edgar Guest read a new poem. The gates still stand at the site, minus the large sign. Each column was sculpted from 250 tons of white Barre granite. The Berkley Historical Museum is open from 2 to 4 p.m. Sundays and from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesdays. It is located at 3338 Coolidge Highway, in the old firehouse.

FARMINGTON HILLS — Most of us know someone who does this, or we’ve done it ourselves. Picking nails, pulling hair or some other absent-minded tic. But for some, it reaches the level of compulsion, to the point of self-harm.

FARMINGTON HILLS/METRO DETROIT — Farmington Hills car enthusiast Harvey Ettinger can’t get enough of his 1925 Model T street car, which he made from a kit. Ettinger, a retired Ford Motor Co. engineer, wants to share his work of art with others at the 66th annual Meguiar’s Detroit Autorama March 2-4 at Cobo Center, 1 Washington Blvd. The show is presented by O’Reilly Auto Parts, according to a press release.

SHELBY TOWNSHIP — The Shelby Township Gardeners Club will welcome a local greenhouse owner to present the “Newest and Best Flowers for 2018” at 1 p.m. next Thursday, March 8, at the Burgess-Shadbush Nature Center.

ST. CLAIR SHORES — “Three! Two! One! Go!” Visitors to Blossom Heath Park the afternoon of Feb. 18 could have been forgiven for thinking that an Olympic event was about to begin, thanks to the roar of the crowd before and after each of the 36 contestants took the Polar Plunge.

WARREN — More than 600,000 Michiganders served at home or abroad in the armed forces during World War II. Most returned to raise families and help build their communities. We’ll never know how the stories could have ended for the thousands who never made it back.

HARRISON TOWNSHIP — The winter of 2018 has been rough, with all the snow and ice and frigid temperatures. This 1938 Detroit News photo shows that these conditions are nothing new to Clinton River business owners and residents.

ROYAL OAK — With Woodward Avenue running right through Royal Oak, it’s no surprise that the city’s residents will make their presence known at the 66th Meguiar’s Detroit Autorama at Cobo Center March 2-4.

In the play “The Meeting,” civil rights leaders Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. have a conversation. And on Feb. 22 at the Madison Heights Public Library, scenes from the play will be performed by the Ebony Road Players in recognition of Black History Month.

METRO DETROIT — It’s a tale Dr. Theresa DePorter has seen time and time again: Pet parents, at their wits’ end, bring their dog into the clinic for behavioral issues. The dog won’t listen to commands, won’t look its owner in the eye and destroys things around the house.